Pride of ownership with this beautiful Cambrian home that includes 3 bedrooms, plenty of natural light, 15’10” vaulted ceilings in the living room and master bedroom, 3 sliding glass doors that invite you to the very private, and landscaped rear yard, gorgeous remodeled kitchen with granite slab counters, recessed lighting, remodeled bathrooms with travertine and nickel finishes. Hardwood floors throughout most of the home, double pane windows, copper plumbing, huge side yard that can be used as a dog run, garden, or even boat storage.

The great news is that San Jose, CA didn’t make the list and that would be for many reasons…not just because our high temperature today will hit 77 degrees while half the U.S. is buried in snow. San Jose is located minutes away from Apple, Google, Facebook, Intel to name a few.

Now, the parts hit the hardest in California like Sacramento, Stockton, Merced are bouncing back because of the huge adjustment in prices for starters. My thought is Central Valley grew so fast in home prices because of all the money that came from Silicon Valley appreciation. Current home owners at the time all of sudden had lots of equity and wanted to spend it somewhere…well that somewhere was Central Valley. This huge rise in homes being bought up by investors increased the prices so much, and at the same time was not justified by jobs, but mainly investors. Read below to see where the most miserable Cities are located…

Even plenty of sunshine can’t get the cities that topped the list of the most miserable smiling.California residents are pretty miserable, according to Forbes’ list of the most unhappy cities in the United States. California cities account for eight of the 20 most miserable places in the U.S., and four of the top five. Falling home prices, high unemployment, high crime, steep state taxes, and a large budget deficit have brought a lot of Californians down in recent months.Here is the list of the most miserable cities, according to Forbes:1. Stockton, Calif.
2. Miami
3. Merced, Calif.
4. Modesto, Calif.
5. Sacramento, Calif.
6. Memphis, Tenn.
7. Chicago
8. West Palm Beach, Fla.

Forbes analyzed 200 U.S. cities for its list, taking into account such factors as housing, unemployment, weather, taxes, commuting times, crime, and how the cities’ sports teams performed in recent years.

“Both California and Florida have a history of boom and bust economies,” Kurt Badenhausen, Forbes senior editor, told Reuters. “People flooded to these states because of the weather during the boom years but that helped inflate the massive bubble in housing.”

In Stockton, home prices have fallen by 58 percent over the last three years and unemployment has averaged 14.3 percent–and projected to rise to 18.1 percent in 2011.

“Stockton has issues that it needs to address, but an article like this is the equivalent of bayoneting the wounded,” Bob Deis, Stockton city manager, told Forbes.

Cleveland — which last year held the title as the most miserable — is getting a little happier; it ranking 10th on this year’s list. Cleveland’s unemployment rate increased at a much slower rate than other parts of the country, which helped improve its ranking this year.